Iran
President Ahmadinejad At UN Quotes Hitler: New World Order Needed

By
Joel Leyden
Israel News Agency

New
York, New York --- September 26, 2012 ... Speaking at the UN on
the holiest day of the Jewish calendar, Yom Kippur, Iran President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad praised Allah and spoke of a better life for
nations, representing human values, peace, harmony and humanity
by attacking global democracy.

Ahmadinejad,
who has called for the destruction of Israel stated that the Israeli
government was a "fake government" responsible for the
"genocide" of the Palestinian people. Ahmadinejad did
not mention Israel's unilateral peace moves such as leaving Gaza
and the terror rockets fired from Gaza at Israeli towns and cities.

"The
continued threat by the uncivilized Zionists to resort to military
action against our great nation is a clear example of this bitter
reality," said Ahmadinejad, who in the past has denied the
Holocaust and just days earlier called for the "elimination"
of Israel.

Ahmadinejad
stated that despite all efforts to achieve happiness - capitalism
and consumerism by the US, the UK, France, Germany and Japan was
responsible for both droughts and floods. He stated that the present
global, democratic leadership represented an oppressive international
world order, words that Hitler once used. That this "wrong
management of the world was working for the devil" - colonialism
founded on materialism and capitalism.

In
a move to reach out to non-aligned nations and speaking to Russia
and China, Ahmadinejad placed Marxism over capitalism and democracy.
He stated that the only cure for the world's problems would be
the arrival of Allah and Shariah Law.

The
speaker of the UN, over a hot mike, sarcastically remarked with
a smile at the end of Ahmadinejad speech: "The savior will
take care of us?"

The
US delegation to the UN boycotted Iran President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's
speech to the UN General Assembly as a protest to the anti-Israel
views Ahmadinejad has advocated this week.

Ahmadinejad,
who has repeatedly called for the destruction of the Jewish state
of Israel and denied the existence of the holocaust, is speaking
today on one of Judaism's holiest days, Yom Kippur.

"Over
the past couple of days, we've seen Mr. Ahmadinejad once again
use his trip to the UN not to address the legitimate aspirations
of the people of Iran but to instead spout paranoid theories and
repulsive slurs against Israel," Erin Pelton, a spokesman
for US UN Ambassador Susan Rice, said in a statement.

"It's
particularly unfortunate that Mr. Ahmadinejad will have the platform
of the UN General Assembly on Yom Kippur, which is why the United
States has decided not to attend," Pelton said.

A bipartisan
group of 14 members of the US Congress pushed a resolution on
Monday demanding that President Obama pressure the UN to move
or cancel Ahmadinejad's speech, saying it was "offensive"
and "insensitive" to the "Anti-Semitic" leader
speak on Yom Kippur.

The US as
well as other Western delegations have traditionally walked out
of the assembly hall in protest when the Iranian president spoke.
The UK, Germany and France remained sitting today at the UN, listening
to Ahmadinejad.

Iran,
the world's largest sponsor of Islamic terrorism, supplying weapons
to Syria for the murder of Syrian civilians, has recently announced
that it has created a military drone that can reach Israel and
will be dispatching naval ships off the US coast.

The
fact is that every day that passes, Iran gets closer and
closer to nuclear bombs, says Netanyahu.
The world tells Israel, wait theres still time.
And I say, wait for what? Wait until when?

A Senior Iran
Revolutionary Guard commander said Tuesday that Iran test-fired
four anti-ship missiles that hit a "big target" the
size of a warship simultaneously, causing it to sink in "50-seconds"
in the Strait of Hormuz.

"The
mid-range system is capable of intercepting targets at a range
of 50 km (30 miles) and can fly at an altitude of 75,000 feet,"
state-run Press TV's said.
US officials stated that this was a pure fabrication and that
there was no missile firing in or around the strait or the Persian
Gulf.

Israels
ambassador to the United Nations called on world leaders to boycott
Iran President Mahmoud Ahmadinejads September 26 speech
to the 67th General Assembly of the world body in New York.

Any
country that sits in during Ahmadinejads speech is in violation
of the United Nations Charter, which forbids member states
from threatening other member states, said Israel Ambassador to
the UN Ron Prosor.

Iran is focused
largely on underground uranium enrichment plants at Natanz and
Fordow, but it is also moving ahead with construction of a heavy-water
reactor near the town of Arak, which analysts say could produce
plutonium for nuclear arms if the spent fuel is reprocessed.

Iran now plans
to bring Arak on line in the third quarter of 2013, moving up
its timetable from 2014, according to the latest UN information.

"There
is no reason to seriously doubt Iran's resolve to complete this
project on time and begin operating the reactor," said Mark
Hibbs of the Carnegie Endowment think-tank.

Most of what
is needed is "dual-use, off-the-shelf equipment that Iran
can buy all over the world using the procurement network it has
set up" for its nuclear program, he said.

A UN report
last month on Iran's nuclear program, illustrated a doubling of
the uranium enrichment capability at Fordow, suggesting Tehran
was also carrying out new work at Arak.

The report
by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said cooling
and moderator circuit piping was being installed when inspectors
visited the Arak facility in early August.

"They
are certainly continuing to make progress on the reactor,"
one Vienna-based diplomat said. "As long as we still don't
trust Iran's nuclear intentions, even the elimination of its enrichment
capability will not eliminate all the danger."

The European
Union this month said it was "deeply worried" Iran had
not suspended activity at the Arak facility, which like other
nuclear sites is monitored by UN inspectors to ensure there is
no diversion of nuclear materials.

"On the
question of Iran, we are all united in the goal of preventing
Iran from achieving nuclear weaponry," said Israel Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as he boarded an aircraft in Israel
to speak at the UN. "On the day on which we pray to be inscribed
in the Book of Life, a stage was given to the tyrannical regime
of Iran which seeks at every opportunity to sentence us to death."

"On Yom
Kippur eve, sacred to the Jewish people, the Iranian tyrant chose
to call publicly before all of the world for us to vanish. This
is a black day for those who chose to remain in the auditorium
and hear these hateful words."

Netanyahu
warned on Sunday that the US must establish a clear "red
line" that Iran cannot cross with its nuclear program if
it wants to avoid war.

"I think
the issue is how to prevent Iran from completing its nuclear weapons
program. They're moving very rapidly to completing the enrichment
of the uranium that they need to produce a nuclear bomb. In six
months or so, they will be 90 percent of the way there,"
Netanyahu said.

"I think
it's important to place a red line before Iran, and I think that
actually reduces the chance of a military conflict because, if
they know there's a point, a stage in the enrichment or other
nuclear activities that they cannot cross because they'll face
consequences, I think they'll actually not cross it."

The
fact is that every day that passes, Iran gets closer and closer
to nuclear bombs, says Netanyahu. The world tells
Israel, wait theres still time. And I say, wait for what?
Wait until when?

President
Obama, who has traveled to New York to speak on TV talk shows,
has refused to meet with Prime Minister Netanyahu to discuss the
Iranian nuclear program.

The Israel
security and defense establishment including the IDF, Mossad,
Shabak and police, remain on full alert throughout the Yom
Kippur holiday.

Disclaimer:
Articles and opinions in the Israel News Agency reflect
the thoughts of individual writers
and do not necessarily reflect those of the views of other staff writers and the publisher of the Israel News Agency.